Two suicide attacks on a church

Two suicide attacks on a church in an army barracks in the northern
Nigerian town of Jaji on Sunday left eleven people dead and 30 injured,
the army said.
“Eleven people, mostly worshippers, were killed while 30 are in the
hospitals with various degrees of injuries,” national army spokesman
Brigadier General Bola Koleosho told AFP.
A military officer who did not want to be named said the Protestant church was hit by two explosions.
“The first blast caused no casualties and curious worshippers
gathered around the scene looking at the debris… and that was when the
second blast happened,” he said.
Jaji lies some 30 kilometres (20 miles) from the state capital Kaduna
city which has been hit in the past by deadly attacks blamed on the
Islamist sect Boko Haram.
The group has often targeted churches in its bloody insurgency, as
well as police and other symbols of the establishment in Nigeria,
Africa’s most populous country which is divided between a mainly Muslim
north and a predominantly Christian south.
The state-run National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said
“rescuers have been alerted to an explosion at a military formation in
Kaduna state today and likely at a worship centre”
Although no group has claimed responsibility for Sunday’s church
blast, the incident was similar to previous attacks blamed on the
Islamist extremist group.
Last month, at least 10 people were killed and 145 wounded in a suicide church bombing and reprisal violence in Kaduna.
Suicide bombings at three churches in June that were claimed by Boko
Haram sparked reprisal violence by Christian mobs who killed dozens of
their Muslim neighbours, burning some of their victims’ bodies.
Muslim groups also formed mobs and killed several Christians.
Apart from churches, security forces, government officials, and other
symbols of authority have been targeted by Boko Haram fighters.
The group’s insurgency in northern and central Nigeria is believed to
have left some 3,000 people dead since 2009, including killings by the
security forces.
Boko Haram has claimed to be seeking an Islamic state in Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer.
However, its demands have repeatedly shifted and it is believed to
include various factions with differing aims, in addition to imitators
and criminal gangs that carry out violence while posing as members of
the group.
(AFP)
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Persecution In IndiaJune 8, 2013/0 Comments/in Christian Persecution /by Keith DaviesFrom Patheos:
A pastor and his family beaten; a prayer meeting broken up; Christians
forced from their village by a mob; children threatened and abused; a
church building attacked and a cemetery desecrated – just a few examples
of the repeated incidents of harassment and intimidation suffered by
Christians in India in 2012.http://rescuechristians.org/persecution-in-india/
In many parts of the country the small minority of Christians live at
peace with the Hindu majority. But in some states they are acutely
vulnerable to a militant Hindu nationalist movement called Hindutva,
which is striving to make India a religiously “pure” nation. Recent
years have seen numerous incidents of small-scale aggression such as
those listed above, and also major outbreaks of anti-Christian communal
violence in Orissa and Karnataka. It is difficult for Christians
to obtain justice for offences committed against them. Local police can
be slow to respond to attacks, and often no-one is prosecuted.
Corruption is also rife in the courts, and Christians’ unwillingness to
play the system dishonestly works against them. Five years on from the
Orissa violence, few people have been convicted. Christian leaders and
human rights activists continue to campaign for justice, however, and in
December 2012 twelve people were handed prison sentences for their part
in the 2008 attacks. Donate NowPosted by Theodore Shoebat

==============Iran.
Pastor Vruir Avanessian was taken to a hospital in prison uniform to
receive kidney dialysis treatment.
http://rescuechristians.org/iran-pastor-vruir-avanessian-was-taken-to-a-hospital-in-prison-uniform-to-receive-kidney-dialysis-treatment/January 3, 2013/0 Comments/in Christian Persecution /by Keith DaviesVruir
Avanessian was taken to a specialized clinic for his routine dialysis,
dressed in prison uniform and accompanied by several guards. He was then
transferred back to the Evin detention center.Rev. Vruir
Avanessian, an Armenian Iranian pastor, was taken to a local hospital
from his cell at Evin detention center to receive much needed kidney
dialysis treatment and then was transferred back to the prison.The
60 year old pastor was taken to Shahid Hashemi-Nejad hospital’s dialysis
wing located in the Vanak area of Tehran, accompanied by several prison
guards. The local weather was extremely cold and he was escorted
wearing only a thin prison uniform, without any proper outer clothing.
He was subsequently returned to the prison after the completion of the
much needed medical procedure.He was allowed a brief visit with his wife, Rima Avanessian, at the hospital.Eye-witnesses
reported that the Christian pastor, who has served the Christian
community for more than 17 years and is in critical health, was taken to
the hospital to receive treatment, wearing a uniform that is used only
for convicted/formally charged criminals.This occurred while the
presiding chairman of the Social Committee of the Islamic Republic of
Iran’s parliament declared in a recent report that Iranian prisons are
like hotels and contrary to other countries, the Islamic Republic treats
even the convicted criminals with dignity and respect!Rev.
Avanessian was being treated as a convict, although he has not been
charged with any crimes and has not even been informed of the reasons
for his arrest. Also, he was transported to the hospital in a prison
uniform that reserved for convicted criminals.Sources indicate that
the health of this 60 year old pastor is fragile and the ongoing
detention, given the current condition of detention centers and prisons
in Iran, could pose a grave danger to the frail Christian leader.Rev.
Avanessian is currently suffering from heart disease and several
operations that resulted in his premature retirement from ministry.
Also, due to his diabetes and kidney dysfunction, he requires regular
dialysis on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays each week at the dialysis
clinic of Hashemi-Nejad Hospital.It must be remembered that Rev.
Vruir Avanessian along with 50 other newly converted Christians, who had
gathered at a residence in the Northern suburbs of Tehran to celebrate
and worship God on the arrival of the festive season of Christmas, were
interrupted by security officers and detained for several hours. He,
unlike others, was taken to an unknown location for further
interrogation and detention.After the arrest of this Christian
musician, and his transfer to an unknown location, on Friday, December
28, Pastor Avanessian was given permission to contact his family by
phone for one minute to inform them of his health and well-being. He was
apparently unable to give much explanation about the state of his
health or his location.On Saturday, December 29, one of the prison
staff contacted home of Pastor Avanessian and asked his wife to bring
his medication to the prison. While delivering the necessary medications
to the prison authorities, Mrs. Rima Avanessian warned them that prison
and security authorities would be responsible for any mishaps that
could endanger the health and life of her husband.(mohabatnews) =============Libya
released four Egyptian Christians who spent more than a month in jail.
April 13, 2013/0 Comments/in Christian Persecution /by Keith DaviesClick Here to Save a Christians Life Now!Libya
on Thursday released four Egyptian Christians who spent more than a
month in jail after being accused of proselytizing, Egypt’s state news
agency MENA said.Quoting church sources, MENA said Libyan
authorities had dropped the charges against them. A fifth detained
Egyptian died in a Tripoli prison last month, it added.The release
comes after Egypt extradited two members of the regime of ousted Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi earlier this month. An Egyptian court barred the
extradition of a cousin of Gaddafi claiming to hold Egyptian
citizenship.Last month, Egyptian judicial sources told Reuters Egypt was seeking to swap the Libyans with the Egyptian Copts.On
Wednesday, Libya decided to grant Egypt, struggling with economic and
political turmoil, a $2 billion five-year interest-free loan.Libya’s
small Christian community has expressed fears over Islamist extremism
as the government struggles to impose its authority over armed groups
which have refused to lay down their weapons since the 2011 war that
ousted Gaddafi.In December, an explosion at a building belonging to a
Coptic church in Dafniya, close to the western Libyan city of Misrata,
killed two Egyptian men and wounded two others.Click Here to Save a Christians Life Now!http://rescuechristians.org/libya-released-four-egyptian-christians-who-spent-more-than-a-month-in-jail/ Mideast Christians Face Widening PersecutionJanuary
16, 2012/0 Comments/in Christian Persecution /by Keith Davies. UNITED
NATIONS ― Though it’s the birthplace of Christianity in ancient times,
the modern Middle East is increasingly hostile to Christianity as civil
conflict, Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism grow in scope and
strength.A few months ago, during the U.N.’s annual debate, the
Vatican’s Secretary of State Archbishop Dominique Mamberti told
assembled delegates that Christians currently suffer more persecution
because of their faith and any other religious group. He warned that
this “denial of religious freedom threatened peace and security and
precluded human development.”Archbishop Mamberti stressed, “Respect
for religious freedom is the fundamental path for the construction of
peace, the recognition of human dignity and the safeguarding of human
rights.”Though the forum of the United Nations regularly echoes
calls for global rights, freedoms, and religious tolerance, rarely are
any states singled out as persecutors of Christianity ― especially in
the Middle East.Iraq offers a bittersweet example. The country’s
Christian community dates to the 2nd century A.D. with communities in
the Chaldean and Assyrian churches comprising about 15 percent of the
prewar population, a presence numbered approximately 500,000.Though
Saddam’s regime did not persecute Christians for their religion per se,
many believers nonetheless fled due to political intolerance. Following
the 2003 Anglo/American invasion toppling Saddam, the genie of sectarian
strife was out of the bottle.“Iraq’s Christian community has
dwindled since the U.S.-led invasion. Though no reliable statistics
exist, most experts believe that less than 300,000 Christians remain in
Iraq. Hundreds of thousands have sought refuge in Jordan and Syria,” the
Catholic Near East Welfare Association (CNEWA) said. Sixty-six percent
belong to the Chaldean Catholic church. Interestingly one out of five
Iraqis was a Christian in 1932; today the number has dwindled to 1 in
33.Christians are targeted by Islamic factions and as recently as
2010, some 52 people were killed during the siege of a Catholic church
in Baghdad. Estimates say as much as half or more of Iraqi Christians
have left the country or are internally displaced.According to the
New York-based Catholic Near East, many displaced Iraqi Christians have
found religious refuge in the Kurdish-controlled north of the country.
The Kurds remain committed to protecting religious minorities and thus
Christians have found safe haven.But the winds of the Arab Spring
have not been kind to Christians in Egypt, where the country’s large
Coptic community has come under assault. Though approximately 10 percent
of the population largely protected during the secular government of
deposed President Hosni Mubarak, the communities have come under assault
over the past year. Domestic political chaos, growing Islamic
fundamentalism, and simmering discrimination has targeted this
vulnerable community.Equally in Syria, a 5-percent strong Christian
community, remains divided between Greek Orthodox and Catholics. Despite
the secular Assad family dictatorship, the minority has not been
specifically targeted but many Christians have emigrated. Still Syria
has hosted fleeing Iraqi Christians who number 150,000 according to
CNEWA.On the positive side, tiny Lebanon hosts a Christian community
numbering over a million and comprising over a third of the population.
Partly reflecting the legacy of French rule, a strong Maronite church
among others shares political power with Muslim factions to this day.
Sadly the Lebanese civil war in the 1970s was rooted in sectarian
strife. Today’s Lebanon, again regaining prosperity, remains a place of
tolerance.So too does the Kingdom of Jordan where the Christian
population has dropped from 5 percent to the current 3 percent.
Significantly in the Royal Parliament, nine of the 110 seats are
specifically reserved for Christians and relations are generally
positive. Israel allows its small Arab Christian community to practice
their religion freely.Sadly in the lands of the ancient Christian
denominations, highly politicized Islam remains a challenge to the
churches. Given the fragile or fragmented role of secular Arab states,
Christian minorities are among the first to be demonized and often
targeted. The world watches and does little about this blatant religious
intolerance.source: Assyrian International News Agency http://rescuechristians.org/mideast-christians-face-widening-persecution/

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